The Procrastination Equation (32 page)

BOOK: The Procrastination Equation
8.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

2e
The most infamous excuse is to claim the death of a grandparent. Mortality of grandparents increases several hundredfold during final exams, a statistic that if taken seriously suggests that seeing the grandkids being tested is extremely stressful for the elderly.

3a
The Latin name for Great Tits is Parus major; despite the suggestive name, all but begging to be made fun of, they are the best studied bird in the world.

3b
Gary Marcus, a New York University psychologist and author of Kluge: The Haphazard Construction of the Human Mind, concludes that “over hundreds of millions of years, evolution selected strongly for creatures that lived largely in the moment.”

3c
In Greek today, malakia has a somewhat fouler meaning, possibly best translated as “wanker.”

3d
Naturally, Dr. Johnson procrastinated writing that very article until the last possible moment, composing it in Sir Joshua Reynolds' parlor while the errand boy waited outside to bring it to press. “Typical,” as his friend Hester Piozzi remembered, given that “numberless are the instances of his writing under immediate pressure of importunity or distress.”

4a
It was definitely a bad idea.

4b
Alternatively, you will get almost the same type of slope with a fixed ratio schedule, which occurs when there is a set amount of work to be done before reaping your reward. For example, piece-rate factory workers who get paid for every one hundred units produced tend to work a little harder as they approach that hundredth mark and then they take a breather. In the professional literature, this is known as “break and run,” the pattern of taking a break after completing a work block before accelerating once again toward the next finish line.

4c
Similarly, and at about the same time, the psychologist Stuart Vyse reports in Going Broke: Why Americans Can’t Hold On to Their Money, “Any time the urge strikes, we now have the capability to act on it impulsively, and that creates a much greater challenge for us than was ever the case before. It’s only natural that we are having trouble with debt.”

5a
Not me, but only because I wrote this book. With two kids and a wife, I completed my will within a few days of writing this sentence.

5b
Abraham Lincoln: “The leading rule for the lawyer, as for the man of every other calling, is diligence. Leave nothing for to-morrow which can be done to-day.”

Martin Luther King: “How soon not now, becomes never.”

5c
In his own words: “And when Thou didst on all sides show me that what Thou said was true, I, though convinced of its truth, only repeated my dull and drowsy words, 'Right away, one minute, leave me but a little.' But 'right away' wasn’t ever right now, and my 'little while' went on for a long while . . .”

5d
For another example, see St. Gabriel Possenti, who consistently swore whenever he became seriously ill that he would enter a religious order, only to have his resolve disappear when he healed. It took several bouts of illness before he kept his word, whereupon he contracted tuberculosis and died a few years later.

5e
Such as Johnathan Edwards' eighteenth-century classic Procrastination, or The Sin and Folly of Depending on Future Time. Similarly, you have Reverend Edward Irving’s, “Procrastination is the kidnapper of souls and the recruiting-officer of hell;” and Reverend Aughey’s, “Procrastination has populated hell. All the doomed and damned from Christian lands are victims of this pernicious and destructive wile of the devil. It is foolish to procrastinate.”

6a
Group-level procrastination is actually common enough to receive an official name; many business academics call it punctuated equilibrium.

6b
These Defined Contribution plans are usually supported by the government and go by a variety of names, depending on the country you live in. For example, Americans have their 401(k)s, while Canadians have RRSPs. The UK has Pension Provisions, while France has Special Retirement Plans.

6c
Furthermore, the amount put aside doesn’t rely upon their present wages but draws solely on the extra money gained from assumed future salary raises. This is a nifty ploy, based on the “wage illusion.” Wage increases typically keep salaries level with inflation, so you aren’t really any richer. Still, a raise often feels like “extra money,” instead of drawing on exactly what you are making now.

7a
Sports teams constantly struggle against this trend, as it is natural to feel that last year’s victory ensures the next season’s success. As Bill Russell, winner of the NBA’s most valuable player award five times over, notes, “It’s much harder to keep a championship than to win one . . . there’s a temptation to believe that the last championship will somehow win the next one automatically.”

7b
We could also cite the International Farm Youth Exchange or 4-H clubs (i.e., Head, Heart, Hands, and Health). With a similar slogan of “learn by doing,” they also aid in youth development. Having branched out considerably from their agricultural beginnings, they actively prepare students to excel across a variety of specialties, especially the sciences. Ask any alumni of any 4-H club what they thought of it; overwhelmingly they will testify that it was a major contribution to their self-confidence.

7c
Sigmund Freud much earlier drew a similar conclusion. Fantasy is primarily a process whereby we form an image of our desire and receive gratification from it alone. This is much like addiction to Internet pornography, where pixels take the place of people.

7d
Little of this is new. Benjamin Franklin wrote about the need for hard work in The Way to Wealth, over 150 years before Wallace Wattles' The Science of Getting Rich, the book that inspired The Secret. Even if you adopt the premise that magical thinking works, it is traditionally thought to operate contrary to the way professed by The Secret. Magnets actually attract their counter, that is positive attracts negative. Consequently, boasting about or predicting a positive result means it is less likely to come true; we jinx the outcome by tempting fate. It is why we knock on or touch wood after reporting good luck or health, in an effort to avoid the curse and allow the good luck to continue.

7e
This is from William James' 1890 textbook, Principles of Psychology. James is actually summarizing a recommendation made four years earlier by Alexander Bain: “It is necessary, above all things, never to lose a battle. Every gain on the wrong side undoes the effect of many conquests on the right.” For that matter, what James considers the second greatest Victorian maxim is also relevant: “Seize the very first possible opportunity to act on every resolution you make.

8a
For those who have seen the movie, “Meow.”

8b
Oops! Make approach goals!

8c
Which they start feasting on first through the anus. It makes for a nice bedtime story.

8d
As Sir Peter Ustinov concluded, “Contrary to popular belief, I do not believe that friends are necessarily the people you like best; they are merely the people who got there first.”

8e
Go to: http://online.onetcenter.org/find/descriptor/browse/Interests/. If you check it out, look up my profession, Industrial-Organizational Psychologist. You will see that in addition to researching motivation, we also counsel workers about their careers.

8f
One suggestion is Career Vision, which focuses on both job success and satisfaction: http://www.careervision.org/

8g
For example, Douglas Adams, the bestselling author of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, had a legendary ability to avoid writing. As he quipped: “I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by.”

9a
Another great example is from Tony Wilson in the movie 24 Hour Party People. Tony was a Manchester music mogul and aficionado of punk rock. Despite his success, he never retained much money. His explanation is pure precommitment: “I have protected myself from ever having to sell out by having nothing to sell out.”

9b
Gastric surgery or stomach stapling is a more drastic form of satiation precommitment in that it reduces the amount of food needed to feel sufficiently suffonsified. That there is a non-negligible chance of dying during the procedure emphasizes the desperate measures people are willing to undertake to combat their desires.

9c
Do not withhold yourselves from each other unless you agree to do so just for a set time, in order to devote yourselves to prayer. Then you should come together again so that Satan does not tempt you through your lack of self-control.” (1 Corinthians 7:5)

9d
Or, in Deacon’s own words, chimps need the assistance of symbolic representation, for without it “being completely focused on what they want, they seem unable to stand back from the situation, so to speak, and subjugate their desire to the pragmatic context.”

9e
At least a month. See chapter 5.

9f
Here are two national associations: http://www.napo.net/about_napo/; http://www.organizersincanada.com/.

10a
More or less. I don’t want to spoil his plot.

10b
Aside from being referenced in dozens of college textbooks, the Procrastination Equation is also used during managerial training programs. For example, the company Intulogy bases motivational training for managers around the Procrastination Equation and it works. As one of their clients testifies, “When you first told me that you wanted to introduce yet another motivation theory, I thought it was a big waste of my time. Yet, it worked in class. Then, I spent all summer thinking about the theory. I have realized how much it applies to everything in life. It’s incredibly powerful.”

10c
As psychologists Walter Mischel and Ozlem Ayduk wrote: “An excess of will can certainly be as self-defeating as its absence. Postponing gratification can be an unwise and even stifling joyless choice, but unless people develop the competencies to sustain delay and continue to exercise their will when they want and need to do so, the choice itself is lost.”

The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.

Boldface numerals denote graphs and charts.

 

ABD (all but dissertation), 87

abstinence, 134

abstinence violation effect, 267n32

academic dishonesty, 34

academic procrastination.
See
students

accountability partners, 171

Adams, Douglas, 159n

adaptability, 4, 212, 213

adaptive genetic mutation, 52

adventure education, 121-22, 125

advertising, 75, 79, 179

age

and impulsiveness, 33, 162

and prefrontal cortex, 49-50

procrastination determinant, 12

and relevancy factor, 144

agriculture

invention, 57

sustainability, 112

Akerlof, George, 29

al-Ashqar, Umar Sulaiman, 249n26

alcohol, 46-47, 49, 93, 132, 134, 136, 149

Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), 134, 136

Almost Perfect Scale, 12-13

Ambient Orb, 181

America Online, 101

American Dental Association, 248n22

American Economic Association, 29

American Physical Therapy Association, 77

Amusing Ourselves to Death
(Postman), 78

Ancient Egypt, 57

Ancient Greece, 57-59

anger, 46, 93, 165, 213

Animal Farm
(Orwell), 33

animals

and impulsiveness, 54, 55

limbic system, 50

optimal foraging, 54

planning ability, 51

procrastination in, 51-52

anxiety, 8, 13, 38, 123, 135, 142

AOL Video, 103

AP-Advanced procrastination (group), 73

Apple Inc., 77

Apprentice, The
(TV), 12

approach goals, 144-45, 200, 271-72n16

Arden, Andrea, 52

Aristotle, 58

Armstrong, Neil, 131-32

arousal

biological origin, 44

power of, 165.

See also
temptation

Art of War, The
(Sun Tzu), 166

associative cues, 178-82

astrology, 4, 222n1

attentional control, 173-74

Atwood, Margaret, 11

automatic enrollment plans, 108, 109, 115

Automaticity in Cognition, Motivation and Emotion (ACME), 179

avoidance cycle, 7

avoidance goals, 144-45, 200

Ayduk, Ozlem, 212n

Ayres, Ian, 171

 

Bacon, Sir Francis, 151

Baden-Powell Award, 122

Bagley, William, 67, 68

bank accounts, separate, 182

Bargh, John, 179

Basex (co.), 105

beauty pageant contestants, 223n6

beauty, perception of, 54

Bebo (social networking site), 71

Becker, Gary, 101

behavioral economics, 29, 108-9, 230n3

behaviorism, 29, 151

beliefs, 117

Bell, Alexander Graham, 177

Benartzi, Schlomo, 109

Benchley, Robert, 105

Bhagavad Gita
, 95

bicameralism, 113-14

bill paying, 24, 84, 89, 98, 117, 146, 181, 182, 196

bills, congressional, 110-11, 111

birds, 55

BlackBerry, 77, 182

Bondage of Opium
, A (Lefebure), 82

Book of Five Rings
(Musashi), 175

books, inspirational, 127

boredom, 24, 140-43, 144, 162

“Boss Key,” 104

brain

damage, 46

science, advances, 43-44

structure, xii, 43.
See also
limbic system; prefrontal cortex

tumors, 46

Brave New World Revisited
(Huxley), 78

break and run pattern, 66n

Broken Lizard (comedy group), 143

Brothen, Thomas, 37

Buddhism, 59, 267n33

burnout, 147

Bush, George W., 104

Byrne, Rhonda, 131

 

cable TV, 69

Calgon Carbon, 87

Cameron, David, 114

Campbell, Gil, 239-40n44

“Can’t You See I'm Busy” (website), 104

career domain, 83

career success, 87-88

Career Vision, 159n

Carlisle Trust Company, 170

Carver, Charles, 117

Catherine the Great, 126

Cautela, Joseph, 283n36

cell phones, 77, 134, 177, 183

CEOs, 102

Challenge of Affluence, The
(Offer), 78

Cham, Jorge, 87

Chaplin, Charlie, 67

Chapman, Graham, 156

check-cashing shops, 107

children

delayed gratification experiment, 173, 174-75, 177

neurological evolution, 47-49

success spirals, 122-23.

See also
parenting; teenagers

chimpanzees, 51, 52, 175, 175n

Choice Over Time
(Loewenstein), 29

Christabel
(Coleridge), 80

Christianity, 94, 95, 95n

Christie, Agatha, 11

Christmas Clubs, 170, 171, 288n54

Christmas shopping, 23, 118

Chronager
(software), 168-69

Churchill, Winston, 112

Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 58-59

circadian rhythm, 148-49

clarity, 1, 9

Cleese, John, 156

Cleopatra, 59

climate change, 112-13

Clinton, Bill, 105

Clocky, 167, 168, 171

clutter, 23, 180, 285n46.
See also
de-cluttering; dedicated work space

Cold War, 112, 256n7

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 80-82, 84, 168

colonoscopy, 91-92

colorectal cancer, 92

commercials, 79

community domain, 83

companies

associative cues, 179

crisis management, 132

employee-employer relationship, 203-10

overconfident, 130

retirement plans, 106, 106n.
See also
automatic enrollment plans

comparison shopping, 74

compound interest, 88, 89, 106

compulsiveness, 3

comScore, 77-78

concentrative strategies, 180-81

confessional procrastination, 97-98

Confessions of an English Opium-Eater
(Quincey), 81

confidence, 20, 22, 117, 121, 122-24, 123n, 162, 204

congressional procrastination, 110-11, 111

congruence, 155

Conquer Club (board game), 63-64, 65

Constitution (U.S.), 110, 114

consumerism, 74-77

Cortés, Hernán, 166

cotton-top tamarins, 54

counselling psychologists, 156

Couric, Katie, 92

Covenant Eyes (website), 171

covert sensitization, 177, 283n36

“CrackBerry,” 77

Craftsmanship of Teaching, The
(Bagley), 67

cravings

aspect of procrastination, 25

biological basis, 45, 165

and cues, 180

precommitment strategy, 170.

See also
temptation

creative visualization, 128-29

creativity, 85, 155

credit card revolvers, 89

crime, 49, 162

cues.
See
associative cues

cyberslacking, 103, 159

 

Dalai Lama, 35, 249-50n30

Davies, W. H., 212

daydreaming, 8

de-cluttering, 180, 190, 196

Deacon, Terence, 175, 175n

deadlines

avoidance cycle, 7

and brain, 45

and career success, 195, 203

dividing into short-term goals, 208-9

eleventh hour, 4, 9, 45, 53, 85-87

excuses for missing.
See
excuses and planning, 39

registration, 169-70

and stress, 2, 82

students (graph), 228-29n17.

See also
essay writing; students; writers

death, 95-96, 98-99

debt, 78n, 82, 107, 215.
See also
government procrastination and debt

decision making.
See
limbic system

dedicated work space, 181-82, 200, 202

Defined Contribution plans, 106-7, 106n

DeHass, Ronald, 171

DeMille, Cecil B., 67

dental health, 92-93, 248n22

depression, 22, 226n4

descent with modification, 52

desk photos, 183, 199-200

diet, 21, 76-77, 83, 213

diets, 138, 149.
See also
fats; sugar

digital video recorders (DVRs), 70, 216-17

disaster recovery plan, 134

disciplinary integration, 214-18

displacement, 151

divided self, 42-43

Dobell, Byron, 10-11

doctors' appointments.
See
medical procrastination

Dog-Friendly Dog Training
(Arden), 52

Dog Whisperer, 52, 237n32

domestic tasks, 7, 23, 24, 146, 147, 151, 180, 187, 189, 201

driving

efficiency, 286-87n49

reckless, 49, 77, 93

dropouts, 38, 86, 122

drug dependence, 46-47, 81, 82, 93, 122, 132, 179, 281n23

Dyson, Freeman, 112

 

e-breaking, 103

e-mail, 105, 167, 178, 199

ecological rationality, 53

education domain, 83

Edwards, Jonathan, 95n

effort-reward cycle, 152-53

Einstein, Albert, 88

Eisenhower, Dwight D., 112, 255-56n36

Ellis, Albert, 239n44, 261n15, 264n27

emergencies, 4

Emmett, Rita, 96-97

Emmett’s Law, 97

emotions, respect for, 212

employees

electronic monitoring of, 104

and flextime, 207-8

and illicit Internet use, 103-4, 250n3

and online games, 104-5

recognition.
See
praise; success, celebrating

retirement accounts, 107-9, 107n

and work pace, 102-3, 103.

See also
CEOs; e-mail; managers; organ-izational team procrastination

End of Overeating, The
(Kessler), 75

energy (physical), 47, 147-50, 190

energy consumption, 181, 286-87n49

environmental cues.
See
associative cues

environmental degradation

and governmental procrastination, 112-13

and interdisciplinarity concept, 214

projections, 112

Esquire
magazine, 10-11

essay writing, 23, 23n, 33-35, 136

estate planning, 90-91, 190-91

evolutionary procrastination, 52, 54-57, 231-32n7

excuses, 9-10, 34, 34n, 81-82, 85, 135, 190

executive function, 44-45, 46, 49

exercise, 21, 23, 83, 149, 150, 187, 189, 190, 200, 213

Expectancy Theories, 27-28

expectancy, low, 20-22, 34, 35, 137, 197

expectancy-value theory, 26-32

expectations, unrealistic, 132-33

Expected Utility Theory, 27-29

experts, hiring, 190-91

 

4-H clubs, 123n

Facebook, 71-73, 104, 182

factory jobs, 66n, 140-41

failure, expectation of.
See
self-fulfilling prophecy

faith, 117, 138, 204

Fallingwater (house), 10

False Hope Syndrome, 132

family domain, 83

Famous Five, 126

fantasies, 128-29

fatigue.
See
energy (physical)

fats, 54, 75, 148, 212

Faust
(Goethe), 134

fear(s)

biological origin, 44

and cues, 179

imaginary, 150-51

and medical procrastination, 92

Ferguson, Will, 194, 211

fidelity precommitment, 169

financial procrastination

and career success, 87-88

and credit cards, 89

and education, 86-87

and estate planning, 90-91

and MBAs, 89-90

and savings/spending, 88-89

and taxation, 88

Firefox (browser), 167

fisheries, 113

fixed interval schedule, 65, 66

Flashlight
(iPhone), 78

flexibility, 4, 188-89

flextime, 207-8

flow, 142-43, 178

Flynn, Erroll, 67

food

and evolutionary procrastination, 54-55

global supply, 112

and market research, 75-76

Ford, Henry, 141

forgetfulness, 57

Fowler, Gene, 33

Franklin, Benjamin, 127, 131n

free market economy, 66, 74, 78

Freedom
(program), 167

Freud, Sigmund, 131

Freudian slip, 174

friendly spam, 105

friends (domain), 83

frontotemporal dementia, 50

functional magnetic resonance imager (fMRI), 44

Furuvik Zoo (Sweden), 51

 

Gage, Phineas, 46

gambling, 64-65

game playing, and boredom, 143, 144

gaming, 62-64, 98, 188.
See also
video games

gastric surgery, 169n

Ge Jin, 155

General College, University of Minnesota, 37-38

General Theory of Crime, A
(Gottfredson/Hirschi), 162

Gershwin, George, 90

Gilbreth, Frank, 268n2

Gilbreth, Lillian, 268n2

Gintis, Herbert, 215

Global Behavioral Economic Forum, 114

global financial crisis (2008), 106, 108

global food supply, 112

global warming, 112-13

goals

abstract, 25-26, 32, 185, 209, 227-28n12

attainable, 121, 204, 209, 288n57

breaking down, 125, 191, 208

challenging, 184, 202

concrete, 25-26, 32, 185, 192, 197, 198, 202, 227-28n12

daily, 88, 187

easy, 184, 209

inputs/outputs, 187-88

life tasks, 144

mastery, 271-72n16

meaningful, 184-85

motivational chain, 143-44

process/learning, 260n9

structuring, 187-88

too-frequent, 187

top, 11.

See also approach goals; avoidance

    goals; mini-goals; S.M.A.R.T.

    goals; sub-goals

Going Broke: Why Americans Can’t Hold On to Their Money (Vyse), 78n

gold farming, 154-55

Gollwitzer, Peter, 190

Google, 167

Gottfredson, Michael, 162

government savings programs, 106, 107

governmental procrastination

consequences, 111-12

Other books

All In by Paula Broadwell
Damascus Road by Charlie Cole
The Whitsun Weddings by Philip Larkin
Dark Summer in Bordeaux by Allan Massie
The Electrical Experience by Frank Moorhouse
Latter-Day of the Dead by Kevin Krohn
Founding Brothers by Joseph J. Ellis
Raging Blue by Renee Daniel Flagler